Harvesting cereals and other plants in Neolithic Iberia: the assemblage from the lake settlement at La Draga.
Palomo, Antoni ; Gibaja, Juan F. ; Pique, Raquel 等
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Introduction
The first evidence of the Neolithic in north-eastern Iberia appears
about the middle of the sixth millennium cal BC. Until that time, the
area had been occupied by hunter-gatherer communities, living both on
the plains and in mountain areas of the pre-Pyrenees and Pyrenees and
the pre-littoral sierras. These sites were occupied later by groups
whose subsistence was based on the joint exploitation of wild and
domestic resources, obtained by hunting, gathering, agriculture and
animal husbandry. However, the first Neolithic communities also sought
out places with greater farming potential, located on the plains and in
the valleys. This is the case of the site presented here. the Neolithic
settlement of La Draga at Banyoles, Girona, Spain (Tarrus et al. 1994;
Bosch et al. 1999, 2000, 2006b). The exceptional preservation
encountered here has permitted the recovery of implements of wood as
well as stone, some of them certainly used for harvesting.
The site
The settlement at La Draga is located in the north-east of Iberia,
on the eastern shore of L'Estany de Banyoles, a small lake 50km
from the Mediterranean coast and 40km south of the Pyrenees. It was
discovered in 1990, and since then it has been excavated under the
direction of the Museu Arqueologic Comarcal de Banyoles (MACB) and the
Centre d'Arqueologia Subaquatica de Catalunya (CASC). Recently, the
research team has been enlarged with the participation of the Consejo
Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC), the Universitat Autonoma
de Barcelona (UAB) and the Museu Arqueologic de Catalunya (MAC).
The lake is a karst landform and is fed by underground waters.
Originally it was drained on its eastern side by a small river, the
modern Terri, a tributary of the Ter. This river, as it exited the lake,
must have created an area of marshes on the northern shore, which is the
location of the La Draga archaeological site. During the Neolithic
occupation this shore would have taken the form of a peninsula, which
stretched out into the lake with a gentle continuous slope from east to
west and from north to south. A survey suggests that the settlement
occupied an area of about 8000[m.sup.2].
The location of the site confortos to common practice in the
western Mediterranean region: Neolithic settlements are found in wetland
locations, on the shores of lakes, lagoons or marshes yet close to
agricultural land. This pattern has been documented in Italy at La
Marmota (Fugazzola et al. 1993), southern France at Leucate (Guilaine et
al. 1984), by lakes in the Alps and the Jura, and inland in the Iberian
Peninsula (Rojo et al. 2008).
The fact that the site is now partially covered by the waters of
the lake has favoured the extraordinary state of conservation of organic
remains made from plant matter (Figure 1). These range from the wooden
posts in the buildings to the smallest objects made or gathered by the
occupants. This makes La Draga a privileged place to carry out
subsistence or technological studies in order to understand these first
Neolithic populations in the western Mediterranean in greater depth.
The archaeological excavations carried out to date have documented
a habitation level, situated immediately above the lacustrine chalk and
largely underwater, which corresponds to an occupation by a Neolithic
population linked to the Cardial culture (Figure 2). Numerous
radiocarbon determinations have been obtained from samples of wood, bone
and charcoal whose results place the oldest occupation between 5300 and
5150 cal BC. Equally, based on the dendrochronological analysis of
wooden posts, we may consider that the occupation perhaps went through
different phases, during a period of approximately 80 or 100 years.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
The archaeological excavation has recovered hundreds of posts that
supported large huts, sunk in the ground to depths of over 2m. Next to
these, small posts or stakes correspond to complementary structures. The
archaeological layer has accumulated all the wood from the collapse of
the huts, including several boards, fragments of topes made from plant
matter and rolls of lianas used to hold together the different building
elements such as posts, beams and boards. Additionally, fragments of oak
bark have been found and these may have been part of the roofs or the
floors of the huts.
One of the huts must have been destroyed by fire, leaving inside it
a good sample of the implements used by the occupants, including some
that are partially carbonised. There were many wooden utensils, of types
that are repeated in different modules and sizes (Figure 2). of these,
the most important are agricultural tools (digging sticks and sickles),
building tools (adzes, wedges), hunting instruments (bows, arrows,
spears) and domestic utensils (wooden bowls, baskets made from aquatic
plants, mixers, combs, spindles, spoons and spatulas). In addition, a
group of bull's bucrania has been found which can be associated
with a series of wooden hooks in the form of a yoke, and which could be
the hangers at the ends of the beams. However, we do not rule out the
possibility that these bucrania had a ceremonial use and meaning.
We believe that the first large huts stood on the lake shore
elevated a little above the original ground level of lacustrine chalk.
This building method would have avoided flooding if the level of the
lake rose. It is not surprising, therefore, that no hearths have been
found in situ. However, the recovery of accumulations of charcoal and
cobblestones affected by heat probably derive from hearths cleared out
from inside the huts.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
By contrast, the part of the site situated further inland from the
lake shore was slightly later in date--at the beginning of the fifth
millennium cal BC--and had a lower degree of preservation. In this drier
area, only the bottom part of the wooden posts was preserved and hearths
were found in hollows filled with charcoal, quartz and sandstone
cobbles. Some structures were built directly on the ground, with floors
made from travertine flagstones, aimed at insulating the hut floor from
the damp.
Harvesting tools
Although many different wooden implements have been discovered at
La Draga--tips of spears, tips and shafts of arrows, containers and
hafts--in this paper we focus on the harvesting tools found in the
earliest phase of the site, which are represented by one wooden blade
and seven sickles (Figure 4). The wooden blade (Figure 4.3) is made from
oak (Quercus subg. quercus) and consists of a cylindrical haft, finished
with a spherical knob at the proximal end and an active part at the
opposite end. The active part is a rectangular appendage with a concave cutting edge. This carried several marks that would suggest it was used
to pull up non-woody plant fibre, such as cereals or aquatic plants. At
La Draga, not only have numerous seeds from different species of
domestic and wild plants been found (see below), but also some
basketwork containers made of vegetable fibre from aquatic plants.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
Five of the sickles were fractured, but two of them were intact,
one still with an embedded flint blade (Figure 4). One was made from
Sambucus sp., one of Juniperus sp. and the other five of Buxus
sempervirens (Bosch et al. 2006a). All these types of wood are hard and
resilient. The tools have the same general form: a cylindrical shaft
(the haft) attached to a thinner branch (the hook). The slots for the
flint blades were in the shaft--not the hook--and inserted along an axis
orthogonal to the hook, being set either parallel to the haft or
diagonal to it. In six cases there was only one slot for a blade,
whereas in one case there were two slots on the same shaft (Figure 4.4).
The dimensions are variable (Table 1), the one made from Juniperus being
the largest but it is fragmented and its full length cannot be
appreciated. In all cases advantage was taken of the morphology of a
natural branch to form the hook.
The form and function of the sickles can be best appreciated from
that made of elder (Sambucus sp.) which retained its flint blade in
place (Figure 4.5). It is a tool with a cylindrical haft terminating in
a cylindral knob at the proximal end, with a branch forming a
right-angle at the distal end. The flint blade was fixed in a groove on
the axis of the haft and lies obliquely in relation to the haft. The
flint blade was affixed with pine resin: Pinus silvestris, according to the phytolith study carried out by researcher Dr Jordi Juan. Use-wear
analysis of the blade has confirmed that this is a sickle. We observed
that there was very shiny micro-polish spreading substantially towards
the inside area with a compact weft and smooth appearance. In the inner
part of the micro-polish area we noted some deep narrow striations both
parallel and diagonal to the edge. All along the edge, small nicks
appeared intermittently along the active area.
Lithic tools: raw materials, technology and use-wear analysis
The raw material used for stone tools at La Draga is mainly quartz,
hyaline quartz and different varieties of flint, with flint
predominating. Other kinds of stone, such as quartzite, lydite and
jasper were also used, bur these were tare. The majority of the
retouched pieces are made of flint (93 per cent). Most numerous are the
retouched blades, denticulates and notches. Geometrics and borers appear
in smaller numbers. Quartz and hyaline quartz from areas surrounding the
site were worked at the settlement itself. But for the flint, the
abundance of blades and the absence of certain products such as cores
and uncut blocks, show that the shaping of cores took place outside the
settlement. Nor can we discount the possibility that flint blades came
to La Draga as finished products.
The use-wear analysis of the lithic assemblage from La Draga has
detected a large number of pieces used for working with non-woody
vegetable matter: 42 objects representing 24.6 per cent of used
material. Most of these pieces are blades (72 per cent) of which 18 (60
per cent) have been used on both their edges. The rest of the tools are
flakes (28 per cent) where, in general, only one edge had been used. The
characteristics of the traces on several of these pieces, the
micro-polish in particular, are probably connected with cereal reaping
(Figure 5). But in others, the presence of micro-polish that is not very
extensive, with a very compact convex weft, showing little striations
and few micro-holes, leads us to the hypothesis that they were used for
cutting unripe cereals for limited rime periods or for cutting other
kinds of wild plants, such as the reeds used to make containers found at
the site. Analyses of the lake sediment show that this kind of plant
grew next to the settlement (Burjachs 2000; Buxo et al. 2000).
On various blades hafted parallel to the handle we noted the
presence of a very extensive micro-polish, its weft half-closed and
compact, with little shine and many striations, produced by a totally
rounded edge (Figure 6). Our experiments have revealed that these kinds
of traces might have been produced as a consequence of continuous
contact with the ground (Clemente & Gibaja 1998).
Flora and fauna
Due to the good preservation of organic material, it has been
possible to analyse thousands of samples of plant remains that together
with faunal remains provide exceptional information about the
subsistence of the first farming communities. The population of La Draga
primarily practised agriculture and animal-husbandry, whilst hunting and
gathering of wild plants was a secondary activity. Cereals like wheat
and barley (Hordeum vulgare L., Hordeum vulgare L. var. nudum, Triticum
aestivum/durum, Triticum dicoccum Sch.) would have made up the main
agricultural base, always accompanied by pulses such as peas (Pisum sp.)
and broad beans (Vicia faba) (Buxo et al. 2000). There is a far smaller
percentage of fruit remains such as wild grapes (Vitis vinifera),
blackberries (Punus spinosa), pine kernels (Pinus pinea) and hazelnuts
(Corylus avellana). These plant remains are scattered throughout the
settlement, but are concentrated principally around hearths and
granaries. In this context, we must mention the discovery of a
cylindrical storage vessel in association with the granaries, found
filled to the brim with wheat seeds (Tritticum durum/aestivum). The
domestic animals raised would have been, mainly, herds of bovidae (Bos
taurus), flocks of ovidae-capridae (Ovis aries and Capra hircus) and, to
a lesser extent, suidae (Sus domesticus). It is surprising to note the
large numbers of remains of domestic cattle in comparison to those of
sheep and goats, which generally form the bulk of livestock found at
cave-based Mediterranean sites from the Neolithic. If we examine the
overall nutritional base, cattle stand out as the most significant
species among the livestock raised at La Draga (Sana 2000). They also
make their appearance as a wild animal (aurochs), along with deer, wild
goats, boar and roe deer, amongst others, all of which were hunted
(Palomo et al. 2005).
[FIGURE 5 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 6 OMITTED]
Discussion
As can be seen, the flint blades were not inserted into the hook of
the sickle, but straight into the cylindrical part of the instrument
which also formed the handle. The cylindrical part of the tool thus
acted as both the haft for the blade (upper end) and the grip for a
hand, resting against the knob (lower end). The bent branch or hook at
the distal end lies at right-angles to the axis of the haft and to the
axis of the flint blade. In our interpretation, this wooden hook would
have been used to gather the stalks, which were then cut with the blade.
The wrist movement (45o) required to execute this double action
(collecting and cutting) meant that, when the stalks were cut, the bent
branch had to be pointing at the ground. This would have made it awkward
for the cutting to take place on the ground itself, but easier at a
minimum distance of 120mm above it. Experiments with replicas of the La
Draga sickles show their efficiency (Figure 7) but confirmed the
difficulty of cutting stalks at ground level, although some use-wear
results suggest that frequent contact was made with the ground in some
cases.
[FIGURE 7 OMITTED]
These sickles have much in common with those discovered in the
middle stages, the older Cortaillod and Pfyn, of the Neolithic in the
Alpine region. These were classified as sickles with oblique direct
hafting, such as those found at Egolzwil VI in Lucerne, Switzerland
(Mueller-Beck 1965; Voruz 1991; Schlichtherle 1992). Through use-wear
analysis, both kinds of sickles have been recorded in other parts of the
Iberian Peninsula. The straight sickles are common in many Neolithic
contexts dated to the sixth and fifth millennia cal BC in north east
Iberia and south-west France. We have fewer references to sickles
consisting of a single blade hafted diagonally but they have been
recorded at sites dated to the mid sixth millennium cal BC in central
Spain, such as Casa Montero, Madrid, and La Revilla and La Lampara, both
in the province of Soria (Gibaja 2002, 2008; Ibanez et al. 2008).
Conclusions
The inhabitants of La Draga made use of reaping implements of
different forms: a hefty wooden blade and two types of sickle with the
blade parallel or oblique to the haft. We do not have a specific
explanation for these different ways of hafting, but suggest it is
connected with the kind of plant to be cut or with the process for which
the tools are intended, such as weeding or harvesting. Several plants
have been documented at La Draga that would require different reaping
techniques to be harvested, e.g. the different kinds of cereals
collected for use as grain or straw and aquatic plants such as Carex sp.
or reeds that were cut to make baskets.
Although we have documented a possible implement made entirely out
of wood, used to pull up and cut plants, it should be stressed that most
of the sickles consist of a wooden haft and one or several pieces of
flint. Just as hard woods were always chosen for the hafts (Buxus,
Juniperus, Sambucus), flint, in the form of both blades and flakes, was
always used for the lithic elements.
At their distal end, these sickles had a branch that acted as a
hook or gatherer. Experiment has verified the function of this appendage
and its effectiveness in reaping cereals. It enables several stalks to
be gathered together so that they can be easily cut with a small wrist
movement by the flint pieces that are fitted into the side of the
sickle. The observation of the distribution of microscopic cereal traces
on the lithic elements shows that they were fitted obliquely or in
parallel with the haft. Although in the only sickle that has been
preserved with a lithic element still in place this is positioned
obliquely, other sickles exhibit a groove for flint blades that is
aligned with the haft. In these cases we cannot be sure how many lithic
pieces would have been used nor their orientation.
The study of use-wear traces has also enabled us to determine that
whereas some of the flint artefacts were used to cut cereals near or
over the ground--as a way of separating the stalks from the roots and
ears or the stalks themselves with certain lengths--others were used to
cut the stalk at a greater height in order to use the ear and a part of
the stalk in particular.
Acknowledgements
Funding for excavation, conservation and study was provided by the
Departament de Cultura de la Generalitat de Catalunya, Centre
d'Arqueologia Subaquatica de Catalunya, Museu d'Arqueologia de
Catalunya and Ajuntament de Banyoles. The research was also supported by
the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (HAR2009-13494-C02-01 and
HAR2009-13494-C02-02. Las ocupaciones lacustres y la gestion de los
recursos entre las primeras sociedades agricolas y ganaderas del NE
peninsular. Subproyecto Tecnologia de las producciones materiales y usos
instrumentales. Subproyecto Estrategias agroforestales y ganaderas), the
European Research Council (ERC-AdG 230561. Origins and spread of
agriculture in the south-western Mediterranean region), Fundacao para a
Ciencia e a Tecnologia (PTDC/HAH/64548/2006. The last hunter-gatherers
and the first farming communities in the south of the Iberian Peninsula
and north of Morocco: a socio-economic approach through the management
of production instruments and exploitation of the domestic resources)
and Agencia de Gesti6 d'Ajuts Universitaris i Recerca (2009 SGR 734. AGREST: Arqueologia de la Gestio deis Recursos Sociais i el
Territori). Our sincere appreciation goes to all those who supported and
participated in the excavations at La Draga. Text corrections and
adaptation are by David Passingham and Peter Smith.
References
BOSCH, A., J. CHINCHILLA & J. TARRUS. 1999. La Draga: un
poblado del neolitico antiguo en el lago de Banyoles, Girona, Catalunya,
in J. Bernabeu Auban & T. Orozco Kohler (ed.) Actes de 2 Congres del
Neolitic a la Peninsula Iberica, Universitat de Valencia, 7-9
d'abril, 1999 (Saguntum, Extra 2): 315-21. Valencia: Departament de
Prehistoria i d'Aqueologia, Universitat de Valencia.
--2000. Elpoblat lacustre neolitic de la Draga: excavacions de 1990
a 1998 (Monografies del CASC 2). Girona: Centre d'Arqueologia
Subaquatica de Catalunya, Museu d'Arqueologia de Catalunya.
--2006a. Els objectes de fusta del poblat neolitic de la Draga:
excavacions 1995-2005 (Monografies del CASC 6). Girona: Centre
d'Arqueologia Subaquatica de Catalunya, Museu d'Arqueologia de
Catalunya.
BOSCH, A., J. CHINCHILLA, J. TARRUS & R. PIQUE. 2006b. Els
objectes de fusta i fibres vegetals, in A. Bosch, J. Chinchilla & J.
Tarrus (ed.) Els objectes de fusta del poblat neolitic de la Draga:
excavacions 1995-2005 (Monografies del CASC 6): 27-126. Girona: Centre
d'Arqueologia Subaquatica de Catalunya, Museu d'Arqueologia de
Catalunya.
BURJACHS, F. 2000. El paisaje del neolitic antic: les dades
palinologiques, in A. Bosch, J. Chinchilla & J. Tarrus (ed.) El
poblat lacustre neolitic de la Draga: excavacions de 1990 a 1998
(Monografies del CASC 2): 46-50. Girona: Centre d'Arqueologia
Subaquatica de Catalunya, Museu d'Arqueologia de Catalunya.
BUXO, R., N. ROVIRA & C. SAUCH. 2000. Les restes vegetals de
llavors i fruits, in A. Bosch, J. Chinchilla & J. Tarrus (ed.)
Elpoblat lacustre neolitic de la Draga: excavacions de 1990 a 1998
(Monografies del CASC 2): 129-39. Girona: Centre d'Arqueologia
Subaquatica de Catalunya, Museu d'Arqueologia de Catalunya.
CLEMENTE, I. & J.E GIBAJA. 1998. Working processes on cereals:
an approach through microwear analysis. Journal of Archaeological
Science 25(5): 457-64.
FUGAZZOLA, M.A., G. D'EUGENIO & A. PESSINA. 1993. La
Marmotta. Scavi 1989. Un abitato perilacustre di eta neolitica.
Bulletino di Paletnologia Italiana 84: 181-342.
GIBAJA, J.F. 2002. Las hoces neoliticas del noreste de la Peninsula
Iberica. Prehistoire Anthropologie Mediterraneennes 10: 83-96.
--2008. La funcion del utillaje litico documentado en los
yacimientos neoliticos de Revilla del Campo y La Lampara, Ambrona,
Soria, in M.A. Rojo, M. Kunst, R. Garrido, L Garcia & G. Moran (ed.)
Paisaje de la memoria: asentamientos del neolitico antiguo en el Valle
de Ambrona, Soria, Espana (Arte y Arqueologia 23): 451-93. Valladolid:
Universidad de Valladolid.
GUILAINE, J., A. FREISES & R. MONTJARDIN. 1984.
Leucate-Correge: habitat noye du Neolithique cardial. Toulouse: Centre
d'Anthropologie des Societes Rurales.
IBANEZ, J.J., J.E. GONZALEZ, J.F. GIBAJA, A. RODRIGUEZ, B. MARQUEZ,
B. GASSIN & I. CLEMENTE. 2008. Harvesting in the Neolithic:
characteristics and spread of early agriculture in the Iberian
peninsula, in L. Longo and N. Skakun (ed.) Prehistoric technology 40
years later: functional studies and the Russian legacy (British
Archaeological Reports international series 1783): 183-95. Oxford:
Archaeopress.
MUELLER-BECK, H. 1965. Seeberg Burgaschisee-Sud: 5, Holzgerate und
Holzbearbeitung (Acta Bernensia 21). Berne: Stampfli.
PALOMO, A., R. PIQUE, M. SANA, A. BOSCH, J. TARRUS, J. CHINCHILLA
& J.F. GIBAJA. 2005. La caza en el yacimiento lacustre de La Draga,
Banyoles-Girona, in P.A. Cabal, R. Ontanon & C. Garcia (ed.) Actas
del 3 Congreso del Neolitico en la Peninsula Iberica, Santander, 5 a 8
de octubre de 2003 (Monografias del Instituto Internacional de
Investigaciones Prehistoricas de Cantabria 1): 135-44. Santander:
Servicio de Publicaciones, Universidad de Cautabria.
ROJO, M.A., M. KUNST, R. GARRIDO, I. GARCIA & G. MORAN. 2008.
Paisaje de la memoria: asentamientos del neolitico antiguo en el Valle
de Ambrona, Soria, Espaca (Arre y Arqueologia 23). Valladolid:
Universidad de Valladolid.
SANA, M. 2000. La gestio i esplotacio dels recursos animals, in A.
Bosch, J, Chinchilla & J. Tarrus (ed.) El poblat lacustre neolitic
de La Draga: excavacions de 1990 a 1998 (Monografies del CASC 2):
150-64. Girona: Centre d'Arqueologia Subaquatica de Catalunya,
Museu d'Arqueologia de Catalunya.
SCHLICHTHERLE, H. 1992. Jungsteinzeitliche Erntegerate am Bodensee.
Plattform 1: 24-44.
TARROS, J., J. CHINCHILLA & A. BOSCH. 1994. La Draga, Banyoles:
un site lacustre du Neolithique ancien cardial en Catalogne. Bulletin de
la Societe Prehistorique Francaise 91(6): 449-56.
VORUZ, J.L. 1991. Le Neolithique suisse: bilan documentaire
(Document du Departement d'Anthropologie et d'Ecologie de
l'Universite de Geneve 16). Geneve: Universite de Geneve.
Antoni Palomo (1), Juan F. Gibaja (2), Raquel Pique (3) *, Angel
Bosch (4), Julia Chinchilla (5) & Josep Tarrus (4)
(1) Departament de Prehistoria, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona,
08193 Bellaterra, Spain (Email:
[email protected])
(2) Ramon y Cajal Research Program, Departament d'Arqueologia
i Antropologia CSIC-IMF, Carrer Egipciaques 15, 08001 Barcelona, Spain
(Email:
[email protected])
(3) Departament de Prehistoria, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona,
08193 Bellaterra, Spain (Email:
[email protected])
(4) Museu Arqueologic Comarcal de Banyoles, Placeta de la Font,
11-17820 Banyoles, Catalonia, Spain (Email:
[email protected];
[email protected])
(5) Escola de Restauracio i Conservacio de Bens Culturals de
Catalunya, c. Aiguablava, 109-113 Barcelona, Spain (Email:
[email protected])
* Author for correspondence
Table 1. Dimensions of sickles (in mm).
Haft
Ref. Taxa Length Thickness Width
FG 91 Sambucus 180 22.5
1
JE 83 Juniperus 140.7 12 14.6
31
JI 87 Buxus 194 18 24
13
KB 89 Buxus 210 15 45
6
KA 88 Buxus 204 11 40
12
JG 90 Buxus 200 20 35
23
KID 92 Buxus 200 15 42
5
Appendix
Ref. Length Thickness Width Slot position Handle
FG 91 83.4 13.3 91.6 No
1
JE 83 138.4 8.4 15
31
JI 87 116.8 13 21.5 95 93
13
KB 89 601135 No
6 (2 slots)
KA 88 125 95
12
JG 90 83 78 (broken)
23
KID 92 92 13 28 100 90
5